- Source: 2005 FIFA Club World Championship
The 2005 FIFA Club World Championship (officially known as the FIFA Club World Championship Toyota Cup Japan 2005 for sponsorship reasons) was the second FIFA Club World Championship, a football competition organised by FIFA for the champion clubs of the six continental confederations. It was the first to be held after by the merger between the Intercontinental Cup and the FIFA Club World Championship (which had been played in a first edition in 2000).
The tournament was held in Japan from 11 to 18 December 2005 and won by Brazilian club São Paulo, who defeated English side Liverpool 1–0 in the final.
Background
The 2005 tournament was created as a merger between the Intercontinental Cup and the earlier FIFA Club World Championships. The previous of these had been running as an annual tournament between the champions of Europe and South America since 1960; the latter had undergone just one tournament, the 2000 FIFA Club World Championship. The 2001 tournament had been cancelled when FIFA's marketing partner ISL went bankrupt. To celebrate the marriage between the two competitions, a new trophy was introduced by FIFA.
As a result of this merger, the tournament was conceived as being smaller than the original Club World Championship, which had lasted two weeks, yet building on the one game format of the Intercontinental Cup. Six clubs were invited to take part in the tournament, one representing each regional football confederation. The competition's name, which was the simple union between the name of the two previous merging competitions, was evidently too long, and was going to be reduced the following year, becoming the FIFA Club World Cup.
Format
The competition was a knockout tournament so each team played two or three matches. The champions of the four "weaker" confederations played in the quarter-finals; the losers played in a fifth place play-off. The winners were then joined by the European and South American champions in the semi-finals; the losers played in a third place play-off.
The matches were held in Tokyo's National (Olympic) Stadium, Toyota Stadium in Toyota, Aichi, near Nagoya and the International Stadium in Yokohama, where the final was played. For marketing purposes it was known as the FIFA Club World Championship Toyota Cup.
Qualified teams
It was all six clubs' first appearance in the FIFA Club World Championship.
Venues
Tokyo, Yokohama and Toyota were the three cities to serve as venues for the 2005 FIFA Club World Cup.
Squads
Match officials
Matches
= Quarter-finals
== Semi-finals
== Match for fifth place
== Match for third place
== Final
=Goalscorers
Reaction
The tournament was quite well received, although some commentators have stated that, excluding São Paulo and Liverpool, the quality of football was quite poor leading to a view that it might have been better retaining the two continent format of the European/South American Cup.
Awards
References
External links
FIFA Club World Championship Toyota Cup Japan 2005, FIFA.com
2005 FIFA Club World Championship Official Site (Archived)
FIFA Technical Report Archived 8 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Piala Dunia Antarklub FIFA
- Kejuaraan Dunia Antarklub FIFA 2005
- Lionel Messi
- Sepak bola
- Shin Tae-yong
- Chelsea F.C.
- Andrés Iniesta
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- Juventus F.C.
- Kylian Mbappé
- 2005 FIFA Club World Championship
- FIFA Club World Cup
- 2005 FIFA Club World Championship final
- 2005 FIFA Club World Championship squads
- 2000 FIFA Club World Championship
- 2025 FIFA Club World Cup
- 2001 FIFA Club World Championship
- List of FIFA Club World Cup finals
- FIFA Club World Cup awards
- FIFA U-17 World Cup